Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor Receptor

Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor Receptors (VEGFRs) are tyrosine kinase receptors responsible for binding with VEGF to initiate signal cascades that stimulate angiogenesis among other effects. VEGFRs convey signals to other signal transduction effectors via autophosphorylation of specific residues in its structure. Because VEGFRs are upregulated in cancerous tumors which have a high metabolic need for oxygen, VEGFRs are an important target for pharmaceutical drugs treating cancer. VEGFR subtypes are numbered 1,2,3.

Biological Function:
The VEGFRs are a family of tyrosine kinase receptors on the surface of different cells depending on family identity. VEGFR-1 is expressed on haematopoietic stem cells, monocytes, and vascular endothelial cells. VEGFR-2 is expressed on vascular endothelial cells and lymphatic endothelial cells, while VEGFR-3 is only expressed on lymphatic endothelial cells.

In terms of function, VEGFR-1 is required for the recruitment of haematopoietic stem cells as well as the migration of monocytes and macrophages while VEGFR-2 regulates vascular endothelial function and VEGFR-3 regulates lymphatic endothelial cell function. VEGFR-2 has been the focus of the most research as it is the major signal transducer of both physioligcal, and perhaps more importantly, pathological angiogenesis, especially in cancerous tumors. VEGFR-2 is of critical importance to the body as exemplified by Shalaby et al. who demonstrated that VEGFR-2 gene knockout mice die at E8-8.5 due to lack of vasculogenesis. The signal cascade initiated by binding VEGF to VEGFR is dependent upon specific sites of phosphorylation in the VEGFR structure and the interaction between these phosphorylated sites and other signaling molecules.

Structure of VEGFR-2 and Biology:
The structure of VEGFR-2 can been seen at the right. VEGF-A binds to the second and third extracellular Ig-like domains of VEGFR-2 with a 10-fold lower affinity than it does to the second Ig-like domain of VEGFR-1, despite the fact that VEGFR-2 is the principal mediator of several physiological effects on endothelial cells including proliferation, migration, and survival. Binding of VEGF to the domains 2 and 3 of a VEGFR-2 monomer increases the probability that an additional VEGFR-2 binds the tethered ligand to form a dimmer. Once the two receptors are cross-linked, interactions between their membrane-proximal domain 7s stabilize the dimmer significantly. This dimerization and stabilization allows for precise positioning of the intracellular kinase domains, resulting in autophosphorylation and subsequent activation of the classical extracellular signal-regulated kinases (ERK) pathway.

The tyrosine kinase domain of VEGFR-2 is separated into two segments with a 70 amino acid long kinase insert region. Upon binding VEGFA and subsequent dimerization, VEGFR-2 is autophosphoryalted at the carboxy terminal tail and kinase insert region. Several tyrosine residues such as residues, 951, 1054, 1059 , 1175 , and 1214 are phosphorylated. Unfotunately, due to the flexible nature of these residues, they are very difficult to crystallize. Of these sites, 1175-Tyr-P is the binding site for the SH2 domain of Phospholipase-Cγ (PLCγ). PLCγ is then phosphorylated and activates the downstream PKC map-kinase pathway, resulting in angiogenesis. The importance of this pathway is highlighted by research on PLCγ knockout mice which die as embryos at approximately E9.0 with greatly diminished vasculature. The enzyme Shb is also able to bind to the phosphorylated Y1175 resulting in its autophosphorylation and subsequently bind to focal adhesion kinase, an enzyme that is critical for cellular migration. Phosphorylation of Y951 and Y1059 was shown to activate a T-Cell specific adapter, resulting in stimulation of the endothelial cell migration and vascular formation. The role of phosphorylated 1054 is currently unknown, but might play a role in migration as well. Phosphorylation of Y1214 creates a binding site for the adaptor protein NcK which is involved in transducing signals from receptor tyrosine kinases to downstream signal ERK pathway recipients such as RAS.

Medical


VEGFRs play a critical role in a number of signal transduction pathways essential for angiogenesis and cell migration. VEGFR is a particularly attractive target because they are expressed almost exclusively in endothelial cells and are highly upregulated in many tumor endothelium types. In fact, work by Plate et al. revealed that VEGFR-2 expression is 5 fold higher in the tumor vasculature than in normal vasculature. This increased VEGFR-2 expression is due to a cancer cells high metabolic demand for oxygen and other nutrients to continue growing, thus requiring a vast vasculature. VEGFR signaling has also been implicated in diabetic reinopathy and the progression of rheumatoid arthritis and atherosclerosis.

Bevacizumab (Avastin) is a recombinant monoclonal antibody marketed by the pharmaceutical company Roche. It earned over $5 billion dollars in 2009 treating a number of cancers. It’s principal mechanism of action is as an anti-VEGF antibody that favors antiangiogenesis in the tumor microenvironment while effecting the rest of the body to a lesser extent. It has been found to decrease tumor vascular permeability subsequently reducing the delivery of oxygen and nutrients to cancer cells when used in combination with chemotherapy. Other drugs target VEGFR such as Sorafenib (Nexavar), Sunitinib (Sutent) and Vandetanib, binding to various parts of the receptor, either preventing interaction with VEGF or with other downstream signaling molecules.

3D Structures of VEGFR
Update June 2011

VEGFR-1
1rv6 - hVEGFR-1 domain 2 + PlGF - human

2xac – hVEGFR-1D2 + hVEGF-B

3hng - hVEGFR-1 kinase domain + N-(4-Chlorophenyl)-2-((pyridin-4-ylmethyl)amino)benzamid

VEGFR-2:
3kvq - hVEGFR-2 extracellular domain 7

2x1w, 2x1x – hVEGFR-2 IG-like domains 2 & 3 +hVEGF-C

3efl – hVEGFR-2 kinase domain (mutant)+ motesanib

3ewh, 3cjf, 3cjg - hVEGFR-2 kinase domain + pyrimidine derivative

3c7q - hVEGFR-2 kinase domain + BIBF1120

3dtw - hVEGFR-2 kinase domain + benzisoxazole

3cp9, 3cpb, 3cpc, 3be2, 3b8q, 3b8r, 2qu5, 2qu6, 2p2h, 2p2i, 1ywn, 1y6a, 1y6b - hVEGFR-2 kinase domain + inhibitor

2oh4, 2rl5, 2xir - hVEGFR-2 kinase domain (mutant)+ inhibitor

Additional Resources
For additional information, see: Cancer